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Milky Way

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The Milky Way (a translation of the Latin Via Lactea, in turn derived from the Greek Galaxia (gala, galactos means "milk")) is a hazy band of white light across the night sky formed by billions of stars in the disc of our galaxy.
The Milky Way appears brightest in the direction of Sagittarius, where the galactic centre lies. Relative to the celestial equator, the Milky Way passes as far north as the constellation of Cassiopeia and as far south as the constellation of Crux. This reflects the fact that the Earth's axis of rotation is highly inclined to the normal to the galactic plane. The fact that the Milky Way divides our night sky into two roughly equal hemispheres reflects the fact that the solar system lies close to the galactic plane.

Our galaxy itself, also called the Milky Way or the Galaxy (capitalized), is a large spiral galaxy that contains about a trillion times the mass of the Sun, including approximately 400 billion stars (see [3]). The galactic disk has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years (see 1 E20 m for a list of comparable distances). The distance from the Sun to the galactic center is about 27,700 light-years. The amount of mass inside Sun's orbit around the galactic centre is 9.0 × 1010 MO.

The stars in the Galaxy's disk rotate around the Galaxy's center, which is suspected to harbor a black hole. It takes the solar system about 226 million years to complete one orbit. The closer a star is to the Galaxy's center, the shorter is its orbital period. The disk has a bulge at the center.

There are believed to be four major spiral arms which start at the Galaxy's center. The distance between our spiral arm and the next arm out, the Perseus arm, is about 6,500 light-years (see [2]). Each spiral arm describes a logarithmic spiral (as do the arms of all spiral galaxies) with pitch approximately 12 degrees (see [1]).

The disk is surrounded by a spheroid halo of old stars and globular clusters. While the disk contains gas and dust obscuring the view in some wavelengths, the halo does not. Active star formation takes place in the disk (especially in the spiral arms, which represent areas of high density), but not in the halo. Open clusters also occur primarily in the disk.

The Milky Way, the Andromeda Galaxy and the Triangulum Galaxy are the major members of the Local Group, a group of some 35 closely bound galaxies. The Local Group itself is a member of the Virgo Supercluster.


X-ray image of Milky Way taken by Chandra X-ray Observatory

References

  1. J. P. Valleé: "The Milky Way's Spiral Arms traced by Magnetic Fields, Dust, Gas and Stars", The Astrophysical Journal, volume 454 (1995), pp.: 119-124, 1995. Available online through NASA's Astrophysics Data System http://adswww.harvard.edu
  2. Press release Canadian Galactic Plane Survey, http://www.ras.ucalgary.ca/CGPS/press/aas00/pr/pr_14012000/pr_14012000map1
  3. Sandage, A. & Fouts, G. 1987, AJ, 97, 74

External link:

  1. The Milky Way Galaxy (http://www.seds.org/messier/more/mw), SEDS Messier pages


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